Taking a leap of faith
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Suzie Harrison
A sightseeing excursion with a view of the Empire State Building, the
Louvre and Yosemite at a palatable cost is not only possible,
tourists don’t even have to break a sweat to do it.
The visual journey is brought to the viewer through the lens of
local photographer Ed Olen. His pictures capture such great detail
and original access to these great places that it makes one feel as
if they are there, sans the jet lag.
In his work, as in his life, the decision to become a full-time
artist wasn’t necessarily black and white for this grocery store
employee. Rather, what started as a diversion steadily gained
momentum, as he continued working to put himself through college.
“I was working at Lucky’s back in ‘94, which became Albertsons,
and going to school,” Olen said. “When I first started Saddleback, I
started with photography as a course to keep my mind off the major
course work.”
He started going to UCLA to study English literature while
commuting from Laguna. Still, he stayed with his photography classes
at the community college.
“I stayed down here, never moved up to L.A. and worked at the
grocery store,” Olen said. “Finally, after school -- I was working so
much to support myself through school -- I went on a vacation with a
friend to New York and that’s when I started photographing cities.”
From that trip, he had his first show, exhibiting his New York
work in Jan. 2002 at the Different Drummer Bookstore.
“I was having shows here and there at Madison Square Garden and
Cafe for the second anniversary of art walk and some at Zinc Cafe
here and in Solana,” Olen said.
Gallery owner Peter Blake was impressed with Olen’s style.
“Ed’s a great guy, I love someone that takes a leap of faith like
he did, leaving his job and going into the gallery business. He did
the first photograph I ever purchased, it’s of the World Trade
Center. The shot is amazing.”
While still at the grocery store, right after 9/11, Olen said he donated a photo he had taken of the towers to help out the Red Cross.
“Anyone that donated $150 to the Red Cross through Albertson’s got
one, and it raised over $2,000,” Olen said.
Olen had his sights set on opening a gallery in Laguna and leaving
his days at the grocery store behind. His wish came to fruition when
he opened the doors in June 2002 at his location on South Coast
Highway.
“I was freaked out, going from a job that had a steady income,
benefits and security to just kind of being at the mercy of the
public and the tourists,” Olen said.
The first year was really good, while last year, the gallery saw
tougher times. Exhibiting at the Festival of Arts and the Sawdust Art
Festival paid the bills.
“Most people said that this year [2003] was one of their worst
years [exhibiting], but I feel I did a really good job for my first
year,” Olen said. “I was running around between the Sawdust in the
morning, the gallery in the afternoon and the Festival of Arts at
night.”
He said it was hard to predict when a sale would be made.
Sometimes it was sunny and packed and other times, it was rainy with
a few people around. But he really enjoyed every minute of it.
New York and Paris are Olen’s favorite cities to photograph,
though he has been to many places both here and abroad.
“New York -- there’s just so much culture for an American city,”
Olen said. “New York has the Flatiron Building, the Empire State
Building, the Chrysler Building. I’ve been to New York many times and
have been going about once or twice a year.”
Olen said he doesn’t keep photographing the same images, but some
need to be revisited.
“Certain photos I feel I’ve done, I don’t need to go back -- while
others if I feel I didn’t quite capture it -- like the Brooklyn
Bridge,” Olen said. “I’ve photographed it but I haven’t gotten it as
exactly as I’d like to. So, I would like to figure out how.”
He said he is happy with his shots of the Statue of Liberty and
the World Trade Center, which he photographed in 1999.
“I didn’t photograph it so much on subsequent trips because I
captured it the way I needed to or wanted to,” Olen said.
Olen has an affinity for Paris because he loves all the detail.
“To go to a city with such art, parks, statues ... buildings are so
ornate,” Olen said. “I felt like I was on the back lot of Universal
Studios, thinking you’re going to look behind the building and
there’s going to be a facade.”
When he first got to Paris, the first place he took his camera was
the Louvre. There he began photographing some of Michelangelo’s
statues.
“I was looking at the statues and started thinking what made my
photography different from a typical tourist,” Olen said. “That’s
when I started cropping in close and focusing in on certain features
or ornateness of a statue, or details of the feet or a hand, as
opposed to just the statue as a whole.”
He started using cropping, depth of field and motion to try to get
people to look at a familiar object in a different way. He said it
helps being from Southern California so when he got to New York,
Paris or some of the other places he got to go and see things with a
fresh eye, a new and different way. In contrast, he said he has a
more difficult time photographing Laguna because he sees it on a
daily basis.
Las Vegas is a spot he enjoys too, things are constantly changing
and he likes to capture the seedy underbelly and people watch. He
also enjoyed his venture to Yosemite. While other landscapes didn’t
seem to turn out, he had success there.
“Yosemite -- I almost like the photo of Half Dome, El Capitan.
Looking up 3,000 feet is even more awe inspiring than a skyscraper
because it was formed naturally,” Olen said.
But he is hard pressed to say which piece is his favorite.
“It’s hard to say a favorite of all, I think I have a favorite in
each city,” Olen said. “Sometimes I go through a period when one is
my favorite and then another one becomes my favorite.”
Olen looks forward to traveling to San Francisco, New York, Paris,
London and Spain to see all the greatness through the lens of his
camera.
The Ed Olen Studio is at 1400 S. Coast Highway, Suite 101. For
information, call (949) 376-4977.
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